4.5 Article

Uses and abuses of macropinocytosis

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 129, Issue 14, Pages 2697-2705

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.176149

Keywords

Amoeba; Cancer; Evolution; Macropinocytosis; Therapeutics

Categories

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council [MC_U105115237]
  2. MRC [MC_U105115237] Funding Source: UKRI
  3. Medical Research Council [MC_U105115237] Funding Source: researchfish

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Macropinocytosis is a means by which eukaryotic cells ingest extracellular liquid and dissolved molecules. It is widely conserved amongst cells that can take on amoeboid form and, therefore, appears to be an ancient feature that can be traced back to an early stage of evolution. Recent advances have highlighted how this endocytic process can be subverted during pathology - certain cancer cells use macropinocytosis to feed on extracellular protein, and many viruses and bacteria use it to enter host cells. Prion and prion-like proteins can also spread and propagate from cell to cell through macropinocytosis. Progress is being made towards using macropinocytosis therapeutically, either to deliver drugs to or cause cell death by inducing catastrophically rapid fluid uptake. Mechanistically, the Ras signalling pathway plays a prominent and conserved activating role in amoebae and in mammals; mutant amoebae with abnormally high Ras activity resemble tumour cells in their increased capacity for growth using nutrients ingested through macropinocytosis. This Commentary takes a functional and evolutionary perspective to highlight progress in understanding and use of macropinocytosis, which is an ancient feeding process used by single-celled phagotrophs that has now been put to varied uses by metazoan cells and is abused in disease states, including infection and cancer.

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